carys98
Well-known member
- First Name
- Cary
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2022
- Threads
- 22
- Messages
- 595
- Reaction score
- 865
- Location
- Raleigh, NC
- Vehicles
- 2023 Lightning Lariat SR
It is a change in thinking. Some days I drive 0.8 miles round trip to the grocery store and when I get home I immediately plug in and top my battery back up to 80%. It takes me about 15 seconds to grab the cable and plug in. The upside is I never have to spend time going to a gas station. I also don’t think of “filling up” anymore. Today I took a trip and I needed about 110% of my battery capacity to make the trip. I started the day at 100% and on the way home I stopped and added 20% at a DC charger. In an ICE vehicle I would have filled that tank all the way up but I knew I could recharge when I got home while I’m sleeping.Thanks for your input.
Maybe an ev isn't for me.
Which is why I joined this forum, to get an education in ev workings, instead of just buying one.
If I don't go ev, it would likely be a Ram diesel.
Honestly I am a bit surprised that some feel at home charging is the only answer though, with 240 a must. I don't add gas to my ram every trip to town, its only 60 kms round trip to town. That should be a small fraction of the batteries charge used, is all. We typically shop on a Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday, and then go to church Sunday, is our only trips to town.
As I said I think all of the lifestyle changes are positive and if you approach it with an open mind you will love having an EV. If you try to treat it the same as an ICE vehicle you will be frustrated. But for me the ability to charge at home is the number one advantage. Even if you only get a 24A charger (same as a dryer or water heater circuit) that will be enough.
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